So I guess this is half frugal and half just wanting a guilty pleasure with as little effort as possible, but I used to eat some box noodles that I had to cut out because the price went way up on them. It’s so ridiculous, used to be like $2 a box before the pandemic, now it is hard to find for less than $5. Anyway the product is taste of thai peanut noodles. I can link to it if needed. But here’s why I liked it.

  1. I’m on a limited diet, so no wheat, dairy, and a few other minorish things due to food allergies. This eliminates most box noodles and a lot of good options for portable meal things.

  2. good # of calories. 600ish calories in a box. Not too much sodium, less than most box noodles. Not that I need to watch sodium but ya know. The amount most things like canned food and instant noodles have is just downright suffocating.

  3. tasty and filling. What can I say? it’s peanut noodles, way better than most box noodles. imo anyway.

  4. very portable. I just need water and a microwave and I’m good to go. Presto! I have a cheap meal I can take with me when I’m on a small trip. Also no need to keep it cold or in the freezer.

So what I want is to basically mimic this in a “build it yourself” sort of way. I mean it doesn’t have to be exact, and really I’m also open to other suggestions. And yeah I know I could just cook it on the stove but that is not so easy to just take with me.

Before folks suggest sandwiches: Yeah, but I don’t regularly buy GF bread because it is pricey. So that means I have to specifically go out and buy a loaf just to prepare to take a meal somewhere. Then I have to eat the rest later or it will go bad. Whereas the box noodles… I can buy a dozen of them and they can sit in the cupboard all year long.

  • @joekar1990
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    21 year ago

    Oh the tahini sounds like a great addition!

    Actually if you wanted to make your own peanut butter powder most of the ones in the market that are available near me are literally just roasted peanuts (ground/blended down to dust), sugar and salt. I don’t know if you could exactly replicate the powder at home since technically the roasted peanuts have been pressed to remove most (but not quite all) of the oils, then ground into a fine powder. Ratio is 2Tbps powder to 1Tbps water, but you can play around with it.